• Quinlan Stein

Philadelphia Service Trip

A 37-day adventure by Quinlan Read more
  • Trip start
    May 10, 2017

    We've Made It!

    May 9, 2017 in the United States ⋅ 🌙 13 °C

    (1) What was I hoping to learn about myself as a leader:
    Southwestern College is a small college nestled in the Walnut Valley in Winfield, Kansas. The population of Winfield is a little over 12,000. In my junior class alone at Southwestern College there about 60 students. I attended high school with about that many. My high school graduating class had a grand total of 17 students. My world is small and for the most part always has been. I have done a significant amount of traveling and flying throughout my lifetime, so I have experienced what it is like to be in a large city and to see places that I am unfamiliar with. However, where I was raised and where I continue to live is just a small speck on the map. I come into contact with the same few people daily. My everyday scope of my surroundings has been consistently quite small. Perspective is quite important. Knowing context as a leader will make a significant difference in leadership style and ability. By knowing how the context will affect followers, a leader is able to be that much more in tune to their servanthood. Therefore within leadership, it is necessary to recognize how your surrounds effect your followers. To best serve, is critical to understand what the follower needs and knows. By utilizing their knowledge of the context the leader is able to best frame what is most important. Coming from such a small college and by being in many leadership positions within that small college, I know and understand the small context of Winfield, Kansas well. By being given leadership opportunities within a much larger city, as well as on a much larger scale, I hope to learn more about how to recognize the different aspects of context and how to best suit the context to the current follower.Read more

  • Service Day #1: Salvation Army

    May 10, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    (6) Describe one act of servant leadership that has been witnessed in Philadelphia:
    This empty warehouse room was once filled to the top with bags of toys. The Salvation Army stores these donations throughout the year and will distribute them come Christmas. The toys that filled the warehouse needed to be sorted into separate age groups and then boxed together accordingly. The warehouse the Salvation Army uses was given to them by donation and does not have any air conditioning. The toys must be sorted before Thanksgiving so that Salvation Army knows what all is available to give out children who otherwise would not receive a Christmas present. As the summer goes on, the warehouse becomes too hot to work in for long periods of time. While toys are not as necessary as a short term service such as food and clothing, toys are utilized to make a longterm difference in a child’s life. While at the Salvation Army we were led by Major Susan. Major Susan is one of the pastors with the Salvation Army and was the woman who was solely in charge of making sure the toys were sorted. Without the help of volunteers, it would have likely taken Major Susan all summer to complete one task. One task that twenty were able to complete within a few hours. There is a strong hierarchy within the Salvation Army, Major Susan being a leader in many aspects. She could have chosen to show us what to do by pointing and giving directions, but rather she got down and dirty with us as we boxed and sorted hundreds of toys. Major Susan was a servant leader in many ways that day with the Salvation Army. There were many times she got lost in the bustle of the sort because she worked alongside her followers, doing the same work, and not standing out. Working within her followers Major Susan was able to set a great example of servant leadership.Read more

  • Philadelphia Museum of Art

    May 10, 2017 in the United States ⋅ 🌙 14 °C

    The Leadership team stopped in at the Philadelphia Museum of Art this afternoon. It was a place full of inspiring and historic artwork. The wing of the museum the team explored had a large focus on Impressionism and Cubism with many famous painters such as Monte and Picasso.Read more

  • The Annunciation

    May 10, 2017 in the United States ⋅ 🌙 14 °C

    Henry Ossawa Tanner's the Annunciation. A painting of Mary that I've studied all semester and presented on twice. To be able to view this painting in person rather than on a computer screen was incredible!Read more

  • Service Day #2: Share

    May 11, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    On our second day of service, the team traveled to Share, a food packaging company. Some made boxes, some placed food, some weighed, some sorted the boxes and overall we were able to package over 1,400 boxes of food for the elderly in the Philadelphia community!Read more

  • Service Learning for the Good of All

    May 11, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    (3) What about this service work is different than what we do on the Leadership team?:
    There are two main types of service work. All service work has an impact, but depending on the work that is done, a service project might either have either an instant impact or a lasting impact. While being on and working with the Leadership team at Southwestern College I have had the great pleasure of being provided opportunities for both types of service work. Certain service sites that are worked during Freshman Workday provides an instant gratification. I have painted a Winfield man’s home before who could not paint it himself. Once the project was complete the instant effect was seen in the happiness on the man’s face and on the outlook of the freshly painted and cleaned up house. Yet, I have also participated in long-lasting projects, such as the food packaging during homecoming week. This is food that is not necessarily always utilized locally, but by boxing up food packets, the students at Southwestern College provide service in places where they are not able to see the effects. By packing food and shipping it off, the need is known, but not as visible. While packing food at Share in Philadelphia, this same type of lasting impact was created. The Leadership team was able to box up 1,401 boxes of food to send to the homeless and the elderly throughout Philadelphia. While these boxes of food were not given directly to the needy while we were at Share working, the service seemed different than previous experiences with lasting impacts in Winfield, Kansas. The difference being that there were homeless on every corner in Philadelphia. Travel to anywhere always involved someone coming up and asking for food. The need appeared greater while in Philadelphia and the motivation was strong for this reason. Even though Share created a lasting impact, the need seemed more apparent in Philadelphia, and therefore, service as simple as food packaging turned into an act more gratifying than service in Winfield where the need is less apparent. There is work to be done for all and it is amazing how work done in a different context is able to change the outlook of the service.Read more

  • Service Day #3: Front Step

    May 12, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    (7) Kouzes and Posner suggest exemplary leaders should “treat every job as an adventure.” What have you learned about how to do this on this trip?:
    By the third day of the trip, by the third day of service work, everyone on the Leadership team was exhausted. We had traveled far, worked hard and experienced a lot of Philadelphia in a short amount of time. Yet, we had a whole new story, a new organization to discover and work on. Going into the day we were all too tired to move, however, once we began to hear Wes discussing the issues that were occurring in his neighborhood we were all intrigued. It is the adventure of being able to do something new, help someone else, and the prospect of learning something that had us all on edge, even after two full days of service work. If you treat a job as an adventure, then will not seem like such hard work. If you enjoy what it is that you are doing and if you are passionate about whatever issue it is that you are helping with, that job will seem less like work and more like an adventure. The excitement of the day and of the trip we were on was reason enough for us all to feel adventurous. The prospect of working with Front Step and being able to try new food in a new neighborhood, being able to meet new people of Philadelphia was exciting and new. If you treat all jobs like you would if you were going into an adventure you will look find the new and surprising things in all situations. It was a new adventure every day we spent in Philadelphia whether that was doing service work or touring a new museum.Read more

  • Not What You Might Expect

    May 12, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    This ended up being a restaurant that a few of us ate at today for lunch. While the sign says donuts, I actually ended up having a delicious fish hoagie and onion rings.

  • Calm Within the City

    May 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    Toto, I think we aren't in Kansas anymore. The Benjamin Franklin Bridge leading to New Jersey is not something you see every day in Kansas. Neither is a hammocking park and food trucks full of ice cream. It was nice to know that even while in a bustling city such as Philadelphia, I was able to find a moment of peace.Read more

  • Christ Church

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    On Sunday morning I was able to experience something truly extraordinary. I sat and attended worship in the same church that Benjamin Franklin and his family attended. Christ Church was the first Episcopal Church in the United States.Read more

  • Founding Fathers

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    It is quite amazing to be able to be in the presence of many founding fathers and signers of the Declaration of Independence... even if they are dead. We were able to stand and tour the grave site of many famous Philadelphians and view some historic grave markers. Back in the 1700's many families would picnic and spend afternoons with their deceased loved ones. We chose to go and eat Philly Cheesesteaks for lunch instead.Read more

  • Street Performer

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Part of what made Philadelphia so fun was the opportunity to have new experiences. It is not every day in Kansas that you simply see a man on the street corner playing music. This street performer was a delight to listen to.Read more

  • Revolutionary War Museum

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    A brand new Revolutionary War Museum opened up just down the street from where we were staying. This museum was quite extensive and featured many artifacts from the Revolutionary War. Pictured you will see uniforms from both sides, an early version of the American flag and the shards of the statue of King George III that was destroyed after the war was won.Read more

  • Reading Terminal Market

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Reading Terminal Market is a place you want to go when you are hungry. This market is a very large indoor market that houses many shops and delicious food options. From lobster to chocolate, from smoothies to donuts this market had it all.Read more

  • Benjamin Franklin Museum

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    I found this map located within the Benjamin Franklin Museum. A museum dedicated to Franklin's life and work. This is a map of Philadelphia as Benjamin Franklin knew it. I found this map fascinating because each day I was in Philadelphia I walked these streets, walked past these buildings.Read more

  • City Tavern

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Getting the opportunity to eat at City Tavern was like a trip back in time. This tavern is one that many past Presidents and founding fathers frequented. It sill stands in all its historical glory, the waiters and waitresses even wearing colonial attire.Read more

  • Eastern State Penitentiary

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Eastern State Penitentiary was the first penitentiary built in the United States. Al Capone was housed here for a short time and while on tour here I was able to view his cell. It had running water before the White House, and its model has shaped many of today's modern prisons. Eastern State Penitentiary was operable until 1971, it has laid in ruin since. An extremely haunting building, but an excellent view of a large portion of history within the American criminal justice system.Read more

  • I can say I have truly seen Philly

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    (8) What kind of influence will this trip have on you as a leader?:
    All my life I believed a leader should be a certain way, act a certain way, say certain things. I have grown up believing that a leader was born with certain qualities that make them great. Over the past few years, this mindset has certainly changed and been influenced by many service projects and leadership opportunities. While in Philadelphia the service work the Leadership team experienced was very diverse. We worked on sites that both showed short term and long term change. But it wasn’t necessarily the type of work we did that was so effective in my own personal leadership development. This trip to Philadelphia has shown me that it matters most where the service work takes place. It is important to assess the need, assess the surroundings, and assess your followers before going into a project. As a leader, you are in the position to make judgements about a situation and then it is your job to do what is best for your followers. Through my experiences in Philadelphia, I have learned that while in a leadership position it is necessary to work with others and allow others to lead at times for a project to be successful. There were many leaders that participated in one project alone, but yet not one leadership style specifically dominated. They all were able to work toward a common goal to achieve something great. This trip has taught me that no matter where I go, leadership will continue to work in successful ways and work in unsuccessful ways, that there are problems that may arise, but working with your followers to achieve a positive outcome may always work best when the leader works alongside their followers. Because we worked in parts of Philly that not just every tourist typically sees, because I traveled to the very top of a Philadelphia observatory, because I have seen almost all of the historical sites, I can truly say I have seen Philly.Read more

  • Put me In Coach

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    (4) What did you learn in the field experiences that helped you understand Philadelphia better:
    Baseball fields were seen all over Philadelphia. This particular one is located right across from Front Step in a neighborhood park. While partnering with Front Step to help clean up a neighborhood in a struggling part of Philadelphia I was able to speak with many of the people who lived in the area. Many people were walking by or sitting out on their porch when we came by picking up trash. Philadelphia is the city it is today because of the people who have lived there as well as the people who continue to live there and shape the structure of the city. Working alongside Front Step provided me with an excellent way to get to know those who were living in poverty, those we were serving, as well as a way for me to get to know Philadelphia. Before stepping out to work within the neighborhood we were warned about theft, but because the people living there were delinquent, but rather they were simply just poor. We were also informed that the specific neighborhood we were working in had the lowest education levels in the city. But yet, once we began speaking with the many people we saw out on the street my ideas of the people of Philadelphia were changed and my ideas of Philadelphia the city were changed as well. The neighborhood was trashed, however, all these people needed was a little motivation. Every single person I spoke with out on the street simply needed to know someone cared. One man even asked me where I found the trash pinchers I was using. Service as simple as cleaning up trash on the street provided just enough inspiration for some living in that neighborhood to say “put me in coach!”Read more

  • William Penn

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    There were two people we consistently heard about while in Philadelphia. The first was Benjamin Franklin, the other, Willliam Penn. Two very important men in relation to Philadelphia's history. Here you see a prayer William Penn prayed over Philadelphia, located inside the capital building.Read more

  • Mural Tour

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    In an effort to help clean up parts of Philadelphia many murals across the city have been commissioned. Graffiti is not always necessarily vandalism, but rather an art. I was able to leave my own mark on Philadelphia on the walls at a Graffiti Bar!Read more

  • Hey, I know Pastor Wes!

    June 14, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    (5) Philadelphian leader:
    The man speaking in this picture is Pastor Wes Tink. A man who not only was able to inspire me that day in Philadelphia but many within the Stenton Park neighborhood. Wes is the director and sole staff member at Front Step, an organization recently revived by Wes to help clean up one of Philadelphia’s worst neighborhoods. The Leadership team met Wes during our service day at Front Step. A service day that was almost canceled due to a recent death in Wes’s family. However, Wes’s dedication to this community surpasses anything I have ever witnessed or been a part of. Wes first greeted us with a kind welcome sign along with juice and muffins to start the day. He gave us a tour of the facility that is used to provide programs for children in the neighborhood and the church sanctuary where he preaches. He would not have wasted precious service time if it were not for the extreme pride he felt for Front Step. Wes here in this picture is discussing the need for leaders to be adaptable. During our service day the chainsaw did not end up working and some bags he was going to have us move had already been taken care of. Yet, Wes certainly utilized our presence within the neighborhood. Wes is truly a servant leader. While walking up and down the streets of the neighborhood I had the opportunity to speak with many different people. When asked what I was doing I consistently said that I was working for Front Step and Wes Tink. Everyone I spoke with knew Wes’s name, knew what he had been doing for their community. I spoke with several people, and for them all to know Wes means that he must be actively involved in the lives of everyone in that neighborhood. Each member of the community I spoke with was exceedingly grateful for our help, though no one was as appreciative as Wes (he even sent out thank you emails to all of us afterward). Most importantly as Wes’s follower that day, he made me truly feel valued.Read more

  • Let Freedom Ring

    June 15, 2017 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    (2) What about being in Philadelphia was a new experience:
    I have a strong passion for learning. Being a History major I truly value any time I am able to stumble across any piece of history, no matter how small. Though Philadelphia is in no way considered to be small. Philadelphia was the first capital of the United States of America, considered to be a capital city before the Revolutionary War and the United States were even called the United States. Philadelphia is the city the Deceleration of Independence was written in, Independence Hall being the building where the Deceleration of Independence was signed and dated July 4, 1776. Philadelphia houses a grave site where many founding fathers are currently buried. Philadelphia is where the first penitentiary in the United States was built and remains in ruins. Philadelphia still this day has some of the original streets that many famous men and women once walked every day. I was able to view the Liberty Bell that rang out in Independence Hall after the Revolutionary War. I was able to sit in the same church that Benjamin Franklin and his wife attended, being able to view the pew they sat in every Sunday. I was able to eat at a Tavern that has been around for hundreds of years, a Tavern that had been frequented by many past Presidents and founding fathers of this country. By walking the streets in Philadelphia, I was literally walking in the footsteps of our nation’s history. Being immersed in as much history as Philadelphia had to offer was certainly a new and thrilling experience for me. While I have traveled to other historical sites throughout the United States, I have never been surrounded by so much history in my entire life. Walking the streets where many historical figures lived and worked, being in the buildings that have stood for hundreds of years was such an amazing realization. One that I have only ever had the pleasure to experience in Philadelphia.Read more